Three-quarters of the Moroccan people
live in that country [the Arab nations]. Peasants represent 65 per cent of
the labor force. Stock raising and fishing are two important factors in
the economy. There are moreover mining regions where there is exploitation
of phosphates, anthracite, manganese, iron, lead, petrol, zinc and cobalt.
In fact, Morocco incorporates all the characteristics of a great
industrial civilization.

At the same time it has towns of enchanting beauty.
Visitors become drenched in nostalgia and overcome by a desire to linger.
Morocco possesses charm of such infinite diversity that it always has
something new to reveal.

Visiting the Pavilion of Morocco not only gives an
opportunity to admire the beauty of the country: it also invites
appreciation of the other features of the this land. The cities of Morocco
vaunt ramparts and battlements that were old when Richard the Lion Heart
set out for the Holy Land, castles men were building when Dante wrote The
Divine Comedy.

In fact in Morocco there is a rare quality of Man's
history in length as in breadth. In the streets of thousand year old Fez
craftsmen use on fine leather and carpets the same methods that were used
when Fez was new. Many customs are as they were when great Ibn Khaldoun
lived.

Morocco combines the most modern institutions and the
900-year-old medina of Marrakesh with its fascinating variety of
musicians, acrobats, magicians and snake
charmers.